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Chapter 1 - Hunted

He ran.

Not with purpose or grace. Just desperate, lurching flight through woods that seemed engineered to punish anyone foolish enough to enter them. Moonless night pressed down like a shroud. Branches whipped across his face, opening thin, stinging cuts that burned in the cold air. Roots rose like snares, catching his ankles and threatening to shatter bone with every misstep. His lungs scorched with each ragged breath; the gash across his waist wept steadily, blood soaking through ragged cloth, warm at first, then chilling as it dripped down his thigh and into his boot. Every stride sent fresh jolts of agony racing up his spine, but halting would be surrender—and surrender meant death on their terms.

From behind came laughter—low, guttural, wet with anticipation. Not the sound of men at sport. The sound of predators toying with something already half-broken, savoring the moments before the final tear.

"Little mouse squeaks tonight!" one voice boomed, thick with ale and contempt. Another answered with a sharp whoop, closer, the distance collapsing. An arrow had already found him earlier—grazing his back just above the spine, tearing cloth and flesh in a shallow line that promised deeper cuts to come.

He refused to glance over his shoulder. Looking back stole seconds. Seconds were the only currency he had left.

He ducked beneath a low-hanging bough; thorns raked his scalp, drawing beads of blood that trickled into his eyes and stung like acid. The pain cut through the haze, sharpening his focus for a fleeting instant. Deep in his chest, a tiny ember flickered—fragile, defiant, refusing to gutter out. Move. Survive. Don't fall. Not yet.

Why him? The question surfaced, flickered, and died unborn. No time for reasons. Only the brutal arithmetic of endurance: how much more could this failing body take before it betrayed him completely?

A dry branch snapped under his boot—sharp, unmistakable. He froze mid-stride for half a heartbeat. The woods swallowed the sound, then spat it back amplified: laughter swelling, directional, hungry. They had heard.

Boots pounded closer. Heavy, deliberate. Metal clinked against leather. One pursuer began humming a tuneless drinking song, casual as if this were a midnight stroll rather than a hunt.

He lunged sideways, weaving between thick trunks. An arrow hissed past his ear, embedding in bark with a dull thunk mere inches from his temple. Splinters sprayed; one lodged in his cheek. He tasted copper—blood, his own, mingling with the metallic tang of fear.

The waist wound tore wider from the violent twist. Hot liquid surged faster, soaking his side. Vision narrowed to a gray-fringed tunnel. Weak, his mind whispered, vicious and familiar. Always weak. Always the one running, bleeding, breaking.

The ember flared in protest: Not yet. Not tonight.

He slid down a slick, muddy slope, boots skating on wet leaves and rot. At the bottom a narrow ravine gaped—black, studded with jagged rocks like broken teeth. No path around. No time to hesitate. He dropped, tumbling through brambles that clawed his arms and chest, shredding skin in long, fiery strips. Pain detonated white-hot behind his eyes. He clamped his jaw shut, biting down on his tongue until blood filled his mouth to stifle any cry.

Torches flickered above the ravine's edge. Orange light spilled across the lip, stretching shadows into long, grasping claws.

"Down there!" one snarled, voice dripping glee. "The mouse bleeds like a stuck pig. Easy meat now."

He crawled forward on elbows and knees, belly dragging through cold mud under an overhang of twisted roots. Damp earth and decay clogged his nostrils. Ahead, something shifted in the gloom—small, pale, clawed. A low hiss, then it vanished into shadow. Not human. Not one of them. The woods harbored things older and crueler than drunken lords tonight.

He pressed on. Every scrape of skin against stone reopened wounds. Hands trembled uncontrollably. Sight blurred and refocused in painful pulses. Yet the spark drove him: One more step. One more breath. Refuse them the satisfaction.

Another arrow sailed overhead, striking the far bank with a wet thud. Too close. Dirt rained down.

He scrambled up the opposite slope, fingers scrabbling for purchase in loose soil. Halfway, blood-slick palms failed. He slid backward, crashing into rocks below. Air exploded from his lungs. Stars burst across his vision. Ribs creaked ominously.

Laughter rained down from above. "Look at him squirm! Like a worm on a hook!"

For one terrible second his mind cracked open: surrender would be simple. Let them drag him out. Let the pain end. Let darkness claim what little remained.

The ember surged, scorching: No.

Teeth ground together. He clawed upward again—nails splitting, muscles tearing, willpower alone hauling him over the crest. He rolled into thick ferns and lay gasping, chest heaving.

Silence descended—sudden, oppressive. Torches dimmed behind the ridge. Had they lost the scent? Or were they circling wider, patient, certain?

He remained motionless, heart thundering loud enough to give him away. Blood pooled beneath his back, soaking into earth. Cold crept into his bones. Exhaustion gnawed at thought's edges like rats.

Three questions lingered, quieter, sharper, inescapable:

Can I keep going?

Do I have anything left to give?

Am I already dead, just too stubborn to admit it?

Slowly he pushed to knees, then unsteady feet. Legs quivered like a colt's first steps. The waist wound continued its steady seep. Yet the spark still burned—dim, defiant, unquenched.

Ahead the trees began to thin. Thin silver threads of moonlight pierced the canopy. Beyond them: ruins. Crumbling stone arches half-strangled by vines. An unnatural pallor clung to the masonry—faint, rhythmic glow pulsing in the cracks like veins beneath pale skin.

The laughter returned, distant but inexorably closing.

He staggered toward the ruins. No strategy. No real hope. Only the animal refusal to die for their amusement.

He was weak. Bleeding. Nameless. Hunted. Utterly alone.

But still breathing.

For now.

And in the shadowed heart of those ruins, something far older than human cruelty stirred—patient, ravenous, already savoring the trail of blood he left in his wake.

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